Our cisco 7206G2 BRAS have High CPU usage!!

Hi All,
i have high cpu utalization 70%  usage with my BRAS 7206 while the online PPPoVPDN customers not more than 1200 online concurrent sessions
i revised the configuration but i coudn't found the cause of problem.
i monitord that when i tried to traceroute from ADSL client router any of the servers  ip address behind servers network , it seems the packet go out through DEFAULT-ROUTE route map which results the following:
C:\Users\jit>tracert x.x.176.194
Tracing route to proxy.ctx.com [x.x.176.194]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
  1    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  x.x.178.129
  2     3 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  x.x.176.1
  3    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  z.z.66.129
  4    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  z.z.244.66.130
  5    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  pr.ctx.com [x.x.176.194]
Trace complete.
while the packet should go direct as the following:
C:\Users\jit>tracert x.x.176.194
Tracing route to pr.ctx.com [x.x.176.194]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
  1    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  x.x.178.129
  2    13 ms    31 ms    31 ms  x.x.176.1
  3    <1 ms    <1 ms    <1 ms  pr.ctx.com [x.x.176.194]
Trace complete.
also i have heavy logs on console as the following:
e Virtual-Access646, changed state to down
1527210: Nov  5 08:25:03.825 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access646, c
hanged state to down
1527211: Nov  5 08:25:04.357 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access873, changed state to down
1527212: Nov  5 08:25:04.357 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access873, c
hanged state to down
1527213: Nov  5 08:25:05.701 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1090,
changed state to up
1527214: Nov  5 08:25:05.705 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1090, changed state to up
1527215: Nov  5 08:25:06.317 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527216: Nov  5 08:25:07.645 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access859, changed state to down
1527217: Nov  5 08:25:07.649 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access859, c
hanged state to down
1527218: Nov  5 08:25:09.005 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527219: Nov  5 08:25:09.485 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1059,
changed state to up
1527220: Nov  5 08:25:09.489 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1059, changed state to up
1527221: Nov  5 08:25:09.749 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access149, changed state to down
1527222: Nov  5 08:25:09.749 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access149, c
hanged state to down
1527223: Nov  5 08:25:11.269 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access494, changed state to down
1527224: Nov  5 08:25:11.269 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access494, c
hanged state to down
1527225: Nov  5 08:25:12.273 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access112, changed state to down
1527226: Nov  5 08:25:12.273 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access112, c
hanged state to down
1527227: Nov  5 08:25:12.309 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527228: Nov  5 08:25:13.029 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access869, changed state to down
1527229: Nov  5 08:25:13.029 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access869, c
hanged state to down
1527230: Nov  5 08:25:14.477 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1201,
changed state to up
1527231: Nov  5 08:25:14.481 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1201, changed state to up
1527232: Nov  5 08:25:14.733 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access946, c
hanged state to up
1527233: Nov  5 08:25:14.737 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access946, changed state to up
1527234: Nov  5 08:25:14.821 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access734, c
hanged state to up
1527235: Nov  5 08:25:14.825 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access734, changed state to up
1527236: Nov  5 08:25:14.973 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access97, ch
anged state to down
1527237: Nov  5 08:25:14.977 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access97, changed state to down
1527238: Nov  5 08:25:15.009 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527239: Nov  5 08:25:15.773 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access928, c
hanged state to up
1527240: Nov  5 08:25:15.777 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access928, changed state to up
1527241: Nov  5 08:25:17.921 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access698, changed state to down
1527242: Nov  5 08:25:17.925 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access698, c
hanged state to down
1527243: Nov  5 08:25:18.013 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527244: Nov  5 08:25:19.713 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access133, changed state to down
1527245: Nov  5 08:25:19.713 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access133, c
hanged state to down
1527246: Nov  5 08:25:19.873 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access696, c
hanged state to up
1527247: Nov  5 08:25:19.877 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access696, changed state to up
1527248: Nov  5 08:25:21.397 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527249: Nov  5 08:25:22.033 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access182, c
hanged state to up
1527250: Nov  5 08:25:22.037 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access182, changed state to up
1527251: Nov  5 08:25:22.273 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access718, changed state to down
1527252: Nov  5 08:25:22.273 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access718, c
hanged state to down
1527253: Nov  5 08:25:23.693 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access304, c
hanged state to up
1527254: Nov  5 08:25:23.697 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access304, changed state to up
1527255: Nov  5 08:25:23.841 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1203, changed state to down
1527256: Nov  5 08:25:23.841 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1203,
changed state to down
1527257: Nov  5 08:25:23.849 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access533, changed state to down
1527258: Nov  5 08:25:23.849 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access533, c
hanged state to down
1527259: Nov  5 08:25:23.849 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access403, changed state to down
1527260: Nov  5 08:25:23.849 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1018, changed state to down
1527261: Nov  5 08:25:23.865 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access403, c
hanged state to down
1527262: Nov  5 08:25:23.865 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1018,
changed state to down
1527263: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access212, changed state to down
1527264: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access674, changed state to down
1527265: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access76, changed state to down
1527266: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access389, changed state to down
1527267: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1083, changed state to down
1527268: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access202, changed state to down
1527269: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access253, changed state to down
1527270: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access162, changed state to down
1527271: Nov  5 08:25:23.869 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access66, changed state to down
1527272: Nov  5 08:25:23.893 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access212, c
hanged state to down
1527273: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access674, c
hanged state to down
1527274: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access76, ch
anged state to down
1527275: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access389, c
hanged state to down
1527276: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1083,
changed state to down
1527277: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access202, c
hanged state to down
1527278: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access253, c
hanged state to down
1527279: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access162, c
hanged state to down
1527280: Nov  5 08:25:23.897 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access66, ch
anged state to down
1527281: Nov  5 08:25:23.921 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access722, changed state to down
1527282: Nov  5 08:25:23.921 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access685, changed state to down
1527283: Nov  5 08:25:23.921 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access722, c
hanged state to down
1527284: Nov  5 08:25:23.929 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access685, c
hanged state to down
1527285: Nov  5 08:25:24.017 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527286: Nov  5 08:25:24.481 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access845, c
hanged state to up
1527287: Nov  5 08:25:24.485 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access845, changed state to up
1527288: Nov  5 08:25:25.445 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access437, c
hanged state to up
1527289: Nov  5 08:25:25.449 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access437, changed state to up
1527290: Nov  5 08:25:25.641 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access169, c
hanged state to up
1527291: Nov  5 08:25:25.645 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access169, changed state to up
1527292: Nov  5 08:25:25.693 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access90, ch
anged state to up
1527293: Nov  5 08:25:25.697 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access90, changed state to up
1527294: Nov  5 08:25:26.565 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access572, c
hanged state to up
1527295: Nov  5 08:25:26.569 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access572, changed state to up
1527296: Nov  5 08:25:26.729 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access912, c
hanged state to up
1527297: Nov  5 08:25:26.733 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access912, changed state to up
1527298: Nov  5 08:25:26.753 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access826, c
hanged state to up
1527299: Nov  5 08:25:26.757 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access826, changed state to up
1527300: Nov  5 08:25:26.777 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access714, c
hanged state to down
1527301: Nov  5 08:25:26.781 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access714, changed state to down
1527302: Nov  5 08:25:27.021 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1011,
changed state to up
1527303: Nov  5 08:25:27.025 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1011, changed state to up
1527304: Nov  5 08:25:27.245 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access622, c
hanged state to up
1527305: Nov  5 08:25:27.249 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access622, changed state to up
1527306: Nov  5 08:25:27.317 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access904, c
hanged state to up
1527307: Nov  5 08:25:27.321 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access904, changed state to up
1527308: Nov  5 08:25:27.345 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access675, c
hanged state to up
1527309: Nov  5 08:25:27.349 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access675, changed state to up
1527310: Nov  5 08:25:27.381 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access901, c
hanged state to up
1527311: Nov  5 08:25:27.385 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access901, changed state to up
1527312: Nov  5 08:25:27.385 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527313: Nov  5 08:25:27.541 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access1049,
changed state to up
1527314: Nov  5 08:25:27.545 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access1049, changed state to up
1527315: Nov  5 08:25:27.789 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access293, c
hanged state to up
1527316: Nov  5 08:25:27.793 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access293, changed state to up
1527317: Nov  5 08:25:28.401 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access848, changed state to down
1527318: Nov  5 08:25:28.405 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access848, c
hanged state to down
1527319: Nov  5 08:25:30.021 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527320: Nov  5 08:25:30.217 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access306, c
hanged state to up
1527321: Nov  5 08:25:30.221 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access306, changed state to up
1527322: Nov  5 08:25:30.741 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access991, c
hanged state to up
CN_LNS_G1#
1527323: Nov  5 08:25:30.749 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access991, changed state to up
1527324: Nov  5 08:25:33.021 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527325: Nov  5 08:25:34.569 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access221, c
hanged state to down
1527326: Nov  5 08:25:34.573 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access221, changed state to down
1527327: Nov  5 08:25:35.005 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access33, ch
anged state to up
1527328: Nov  5 08:25:35.009 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access33, changed state to up
1527329: Nov  5 08:25:35.293 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access840, c
hanged state to up
1527330: Nov  5 08:25:35.297 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access840, changed state to up
1527331: Nov  5 08:25:36.297 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527332: Nov  5 08:25:36.833 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access52, changed state to down
1527333: Nov  5 08:25:36.833 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access52, ch
anged state to down
1527334: Nov  5 08:25:37.273 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access868, c
hanged state to up
1527335: Nov  5 08:25:37.277 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access868, changed state to up
1527336: Nov  5 08:25:38.657 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access26, changed state to down
1527337: Nov  5 08:25:38.661 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access26, ch
anged state to down
1527338: Nov  5 08:25:39.029 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty3 (31.223.180.2)
1527339: Nov  5 08:25:40.089 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access142, c
hanged state to up
1527340: Nov  5 08:25:40.093 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access142, changed state to up
1527341: Nov  5 08:25:40.185 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access500, c
hanged state to up
1527342: Nov  5 08:25:40.189 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access500, changed state to up
1527343: Nov  5 08:25:41.453 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access83, changed state to down
1527344: Nov  5 08:25:41.453 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access83, ch
anged state to down
1527345: Nov  5 08:25:41.589 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access273, changed state to down
1527346: Nov  5 08:25:41.593 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access273, c
hanged state to down
1527347: Nov  5 08:25:41.661 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access832, c
hanged state to up
1527348: Nov  5 08:25:41.665 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access832, changed state to up
1527349: Nov  5 08:25:41.697 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access485, c
hanged state to up
1527350: Nov  5 08:25:41.701 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access485, changed state to up
1527351: Nov  5 08:25:42.285 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access788, c
hanged state to up
1527352: Nov  5 08:25:42.289 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access788, changed state to up
1527353: Nov  5 08:25:42.577 GMT: %SYS-5-PRIV_AUTH_PASS: Privilege level set to
15 by citynet on vty2 (31.223.180.2)
1527354: Nov  5 08:25:42.889 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access487, c
hanged state to up
1527355: Nov  5 08:25:42.893 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access487, changed state to up
1527356: Nov  5 08:25:42.993 GMT: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interfac
e Virtual-Access465, changed state to down
1527357: Nov  5 08:25:42.993 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access465, c
hanged state to down
1527358: Nov  5 08:25:43.209 GMT: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface Virtual-Access843, c
hanged state to down
----->
here is the configuration :
upgrade fpd auto
version 15.0
no service pad
service tcp-keepalives-in
service tcp-keepalives-out
service timestamps debug datetime msec localtime show-timezone
service timestamps log datetime msec localtime show-timezone
service password-encryption
service sequence-numbers
hostname CTX_LNS_G1
boot-start-marker
boot system flash disk2:c7200p-advipservicesk9-mz.150-1.M3.bin
boot-end-marker
security authentication failure rate 10 log
security passwords min-length 6
logging userinfo
logging buffered 1x072
logging reload alerts
no logging console
enable password 7 xxxxxxx
aaa new-model
aaa group server radius CTX
server-private x.x.x.x auth-port 1812 acct-port 1813 key 7 xxxxxx
aaa authentication login default local
aaa authentication login userauthen local
aaa authentication ppp USERS group CTX
aaa authorization console
aaa authorization network USERS group CTX
aaa accounting delay-start
aaa accounting update newinfo periodic 60
aaa accounting network USERS
action-type start-stop
group CTX
aaa accounting resource USERS
action-type start-stop
group CTX
aaa dnis map enable
aaa server radius dynamic-author
client x.x.176.1 server-key 7 xxxxx
auth-type all
ignore session-key
ignore server-key
aaa session-id common
no ppp hold-queue
clock timezone GMT 2
clock summer-time CST recurring
clock calendar-valid
no ip source-route
no ip gratuitous-arps
ip cef
no ip bootp server
no ip domain lookup
ip domain name xxxx
ip name-server x.x.x.x
ip wccp 80 redirect-list cachebox80 password 7 ********
ip wccp 90 redirect-list cachebox90 password 7 ********
login block-for 200 attempts 3 within 180
no ipv6 cef
multilink bundle-name authenticated
vpdn enable
no vpdn ip udp ignore checksum
vpdn domain-delimiter @ suffix
vpdn-group BSA
! Default L2TP VPDN group
! Default PPTP VPDN group
accept-dialin
  protocol any
  virtual-template 2
lcp renegotiation on-mismatch
l2tp tunnel password 7 ****************
relay pppoe bba-group CTX
username ****** privilege 15 password 7 *********
redundancy
ip tcp synwait-time 10
ip ssh time-out 60
ip ssh authentication-retries 2
track 1 ip sla 1 reachability
delay down 30
track 2 ip sla 2 reachability
delay down 30
class-map match-all ICMP
match protocol icmp
class-map match-any bittorrent
match access-group name utorrent
match protocol bittorrent
class-map match-any WebEmail
match protocol http
match protocol secure-http
match protocol ftp
match protocol smtp
match protocol pop3
match protocol dns
class-map match-any VoIP
match protocol rtp
match protocol skype
match protocol rtcp
match protocol sip
class-map match-any 512-1M-home
match access-group name half-one-mega-home
class-map match-any Bussiness
match access-group name Bussiness
class-map match-any 4M-home
match access-group name four-mega-home
class-map match-any 2M-home
match access-group name two-mega-home
class-map match-any counterstrike
match access-group name counterstrike
class-map match-any overlimit
match access-group name overlimit
policy-map ICMP
class ICMP
    priority 1024
    police 1024000
policy-map 5M-limit
class overlimit
   police cir 46000000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
class class-default
policy-map qos-policy
class VoIP
    priority percent 10
  set dscp ef
class WebEmail
    bandwidth remaining percent 70
class counterstrike
    bandwidth remaining percent 15
class overlimit
class class-default
    fair-queue
policy-map input_qos
class bittorrent
   police cir 10000 bc 5000 be 5000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
policy-map traffic-shaper
class Bussiness
   police cir 4000000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
class 512-1M-home
   police cir 27000000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
class 2M-home
   police cir 10000000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
class 4M-home
   police cir 4000000
     conform-action transmit
     exceed-action drop
bba-group pppoe CTX
virtual-template 2
service profile CTX
interface Loopback0
ip address x.x.177.6 255.255.255.252
ip virtual-reassembly
interface Loopback1
ip address x.x.177.12 255.255.255.255
ip virtual-reassembly
ip policy route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE
interface Null0
no ip unreachables
interface GigabitEthernet0/1
description DMZ
no ip address
ip virtual-reassembly
load-interval 30
duplex full
speed auto
media-type rj45
negotiation auto
no mop enabled
hold-queue 4096 in
hold-queue 4096 out
interface GigabitEthernet0/1.995
encapsulation dot1Q 995
ip address x.x.176.189 255.255.255.252
interface GigabitEthernet0/1.1000
description Wireless+servers-network
encapsulation dot1Q 1000
ip address x.x.179.17 255.255.255.248 secondary
ip address x.x.178.1 255.255.255.252 secondary
ip address x.x.176.5 255.255.255.252 secondary
ip address x.x.176.1 255.255.255.252
ip policy route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE
interface GigabitEthernet0/1.2100
description CACHE
encapsulation dot1Q 2100
ip address x.x.176.193 255.255.255.252
ip wccp redirect exclude in
interface FastEthernet0/2
ip address x.x.176.197 255.255.255.252
no ip unreachables
ip virtual-reassembly
load-interval 30
duplex full
speed 100
interface GigabitEthernet0/2
description ADSL-BACKHUAL
ip address y.y.90.10 255.255.255.252
ip virtual-reassembly
ip policy route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE
load-interval 30
duplex full
speed 1000
media-type sfp
negotiation auto
keepalive 60
no mop enabled
hold-queue 4096 in
hold-queue 4096 out
interface GigabitEthernet0/3
no ip address
ip virtual-reassembly
load-interval 30
duplex full
speed 1000
media-type rj45
negotiation auto
no mop enabled
hold-queue 4096 in
hold-queue 4096 out
interface GigabitEthernet0/3.2
description ISPA
encapsulation dot1Q 999
ip address z.z.66.130 255.255.255.252
ip wccp 80 redirect out
ip wccp 90 redirect in
interface GigabitEthernet0/3.855
description ISPB
encapsulation dot1Q 855
ip address w.w.172.250 255.255.255.248
ip wccp 80 redirect out
ip wccp 90 redirect in
no cdp enable
interface Virtual-Template2
ip unnumbered Loopback1
no ip unreachables
ip verify unicast reverse-path
ip virtual-reassembly
ip policy route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE
ip tcp adjust-mss 1360
load-interval 30
peer default ip address pool BSA
keepalive 60
ppp encrypt mppe 128
ppp authentication ms-chap ms-chap-v2 pap chap callin USERS
ppp authorization USERS
ppp accounting USERS
ppp ipcp dns x.x.x.x
ppp ipcp wins reject
ppp timeout retry 15
ppp timeout authentication 15
ppp timeout idle 300
router bgp xxx
bgp router-id x.x.176.1
no bgp log-neighbor-changes
neighbor 10.20.172.249 remote-as www
neighbor 10.20.172.249 update-source GigabitEthernet0/3.855
neighbor 213.244.66.129 remote-as zzz
neighbor 213.244.66.129 password 7 *************
neighbor 213.244.66.129 update-source GigabitEthernet0/3.2
address-family ipv4
  no synchronization
  network x.x.176.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.177.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.178.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.179.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.180.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.181.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.182.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.183.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.184.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.185.0 mask 255.255.255.0
  network x.x.186.0 mask 255.255.254.0
  network x.x.188.0 mask 255.255.254.0
  network x.x.190.0 mask 255.255.254.0
  neighbor w.w.172.249 activate
  neighbor w.w.172.249 weight 120
  neighbor w.w.172.249 route-map B_LINE out
  neighbor z.z.66.129 activate
  neighbor z.z.66.129 weight 220
  neighbor z.z.66.129 route-map ISPA in
  neighbor z.z.66.129 route-map A_LINE out
  maximum-paths 3
  no auto-summary
exit-address-family
ip local pool BSA x.x.185.1 x.x.191.254
ip local pool BSA x.x.183.1 x.x.184.239
ip forward-protocol nd
no ip http server
ip http access-class 1
ip http authentication local
no ip http secure-server
ip route 10.100.100.0 255.255.255.0 x.x.176.6
ip route x.x.176.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.176.8 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.16 255.255.255.240 x.x.184.240
ip route x.x.176.32 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.36 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.40 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.64 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.68 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.96 255.255.255.240 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.112 255.255.255.240 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.128 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.132 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.152 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.176.160 255.255.255.224 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.177.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.177.0 255.255.255.252 x.x.179.18
ip route x.x.177.64 255.255.255.248 x.x.176.2
ip route x.x.178.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.178.64 255.255.255.248 x.x.176.6
ip route x.x.178.120 255.255.255.248 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.178.128 255.255.255.240 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.178.144 255.255.255.248 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.178.160 255.255.255.240 x.x.184.246
ip route x.x.178.176 255.255.255.248 x.x.184.249
ip route x.x.179.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.179.0 255.255.255.248 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.8 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.12 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.32 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.36 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.40 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.44 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.48 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.52 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.56 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.60 255.255.255.252 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.179.64 255.255.255.248 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.180.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.180.0 255.255.255.248 x.x.176.6
ip route x.x.180.8 255.255.255.248 x.x.176.6
ip route x.x.180.32 255.255.255.240 x.x.176.2
ip route x.x.180.48 255.255.255.248 x.x.178.2
ip route x.x.181.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.182.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.183.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.184.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.185.0 255.255.255.0 Null0
ip route x.x.186.0 255.255.254.0 Null0
ip route x.x.188.0 255.255.254.0 Null0
ip route x.x.190.0 255.255.254.0 Null0
ip route z.z.68.0 255.255.255.0 y.y.90.9
ip route z.z.96.0 255.255.255.0 y.y.90.9
ip access-list extended cache80
deny   tcp host x.x.176.194 any eq www
deny   ip any x.x.176.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.178.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.179.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.180.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.185.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.186.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.188.0 0.0.0.255
deny   ip any x.x.190.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp x.x.178.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.185.0 0.0.0.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.186.0 0.0.1.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.188.0 0.0.1.255 any eq www
permit tcp x.x.190.0 0.0.1.255 any eq www
ip access-list extended cache90
deny   ip x.x.176.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.178.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.179.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.180.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.185.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.186.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.188.0 0.0.0.255 any
deny   ip x.x.190.0 0.0.0.255 any
permit tcp any x.x.178.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.185.0 0.0.0.255
permit tcp any x.x.186.0 0.0.1.255
permit tcp any x.x.188.0 0.0.1.255
permit tcp any x.x.190.0 0.0.1.255
ip access-list extended four-mega-home
permit ip any x.x.183.0 0.0.0.127
ip access-list extended half-one-mega-home
permit ip any x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255
permit ip any x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255
ip access-list extended overlimit
permit ip any x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255
permit ip any x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255
permit ip any x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255
permit ip any x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255
ip access-list extended two-mega-home
permit ip any x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255
ip sla 1
icmp-echo 8.8.8.8 source-ip z.z.66.130
threshold 2000
tag A LINE 175Mb
frequency 5
ip sla schedule 1 life forever start-time now
ip sla 2
icmp-echo 194.90.1.5 source-ip w.w.172.250
threshold 2000
tag B LINE 50Mb
frequency 5
ip sla schedule 2 life forever start-time now
no logging trap
access-list 1 remark Auto generated by SDM Management Access feature
access-list 1 remark CCP_ACL Category=1
access-list 1 permit x.x.178.150
access-list 1 permit x.x.178.140
access-list 10 permit x.x.178.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.179.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.181.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.182.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.183.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.184.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.185.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.186.0 0.0.1.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.188.0 0.0.1.255
access-list 10 permit x.x.190.0 0.0.1.255
access-list 30 permit x.x.176.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 30 permit x.x.177.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 30 permit x.x.180.0 0.0.0.255
access-list 100 permit tcp host x.x.178.150 host x.x.177.6 eq telnet
access-list 100 permit tcp host x.x.178.140 host x.x.177.6 eq telnet
access-list 100 permit tcp host x.x.180.4 host x.x.177.6 eq telnet
access-list 100 permit tcp host x.x.178.150 host x.x.177.6 eq www
access-list 100 permit tcp host x.x.178.140 host x.x.177.6 eq www
access-list 100 deny   tcp any host x.x.177.6 eq telnet
access-list 100 deny   tcp any host x.x.177.6 eq 22
access-list 100 deny   tcp any host x.x.177.6 eq www
access-list 100 deny   tcp any host x.x.177.6 eq 443
access-list 100 deny   tcp any host x.x.177.6 eq cmd
access-list 100 deny   udp any host x.x.177.6 eq snmp
access-list 100 permit ip any any
access-list 101 remark CCP_ACL Category=1
access-list 101 permit ip host x.x.178.150 any
access-list 101 permit ip host x.x.178.140 any
access-list 101 permit ip host x.x.180.2 any
access-list 101 permit ip host x.x.178.67 any
access-list 101 permit ip host x.x.1.2 any
access-list 101 deny   ip any any
no cdp advertise-v2
no cdp run
route-map ISPA permit 10
set as-path prepend xxx
route-map A_LINE permit 10
match ip address 30
set as-path prepend xxx xxx xxx
route-map A_LINE permit 20
match ip address 10
route-map B_LINE permit 10
match ip address 10
set as-path prepend xxx xxx xxx
route-map B_LINE permit 20
match ip address 30
route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE permit 10
match ip address 10
set ip next-hop verify-availability z.z.66.129 1 track 1
set ip next-hop verify-availability w.w.172.249 2 track 2
route-map DEFAULT-ROUTE permit 20
match ip address 30
set ip next-hop verify-availability w.w.172.249 1 track 2
set ip next-hop verify-availability z.z.66.129 2 track 1
snmp-server community ********* RO
snmp-server trap-source GigabitEthernet0/1
radius-server host x.x.180.2 auth-port 1812 acct-port 1813 key 7 *******
control-plane
line con 0
transport output telnet
stopbits 1
line aux 0
transport output telnet
stopbits 1
line vty 0 4
access-class 101 in
password 7 ***********
transport input telnet ssh
event manager applet shutdown_BGP_Bline
event track 1 state down
action 1.0 cli command "enable"
action 1.1 cli command "clear ip bgp w.w.172.249 all"
event manager applet shutdown_BGP_Aline
event track 2 state down
action 2.0 cli command "enable"
action 2.1 cli command "clear ip bgp z.z.66.129 all"
end

hi ,
have u found the soltution for this issue ??
if so ,
let me know it
regards

Similar Messages

  • Why does SCHDNEGACTION scheduler job have high CPU usage?

    Hi,
    In my embeded device(double CPU 1.5 G HZ ) SCHDNEGACTION scheduler job has 90% CPU usage. Why does the scheduler job have so high CPU usage? What is the job doing for?

    Hi,
    This job is not created by the scheduler. You will have to find out what component creates the job and what exactly it does to figure out why it is using high cpu and what would be the effects of disabling it (which would prevent it from running).
    Hope this helps,
    Ravi.

  • I have high cpu usage due the opendirectoryd activity

    Since I have installed Mavericks, my CPU usage is at a constant level of almost 100%,
    therefore the fans are speeding up en my batteries runs down very fast.
    Before this I had Lion, and everything was running smooth.
    In acitivity moinitor I have seen the following activities: opendirectoryd consuming all of my cpu usage.
    Also, I can't turn WiFi off, it will automatically turn on immediately.
    But even though I closed all my other programs in acitity monitor, this one keeps running and if I force quit it, it opens up again in a second.
    When I take a look at my logs there seems to be a major problem:
    11-02-14 16:21:56,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:21:56,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:13,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:13,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:33,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:34,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:53,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:22:54,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:23:11,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:23:11,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    11-02-14 16:23:29,000 kernel[0]: flow_divert_kctl_disconnect (0): disconnecting group 1
    If i don't run any programs, this log seems to appear every few seconds.
    I have a MacBook Pro form late 2011,
    2.4GHz Intel i5 with 4GB RAM and 10.9.1

    I just read briefly about this and correct me if I am wrong. If you are using unix, solaris use the top (% top) command by itself at the command prompt. The output will expose the top users on the system. From there you can drill down to work on the bottleneck causing the high cpu useage. It could be that it is just being very over worked and an upgrade is necessary. Or by using (% netstat -i ) the packets may be too small thereby creating alot of traffic on the system. Reducing the amount of packets by increasing their size without splitting them in the system may reduce the cpu useage.
    Hope this helps.
    al

  • EA2: high CPU usage with large packages

    EA2 + Debian GNU/Linux + jdk1.6.0_04 + Pentium IV 2,8 GHz 1 GBytes RAM
    Opening large packages (> 6.000 rows) I have high CPU usage (100%) for about 50-60 seconds. Same problem when I working with these packages
    Ciao
    Davide

    Opening works fine for me, and memory seems to be
    contained. Working inside the package on occasions
    still boosts CPU like you.Attempting to edit an 800 line type body utilises 100% CPU as soon as typing starts.
    Windows XP Professional SP2
    Oracle Server 10.2.0.3
    Java 1.5.0_06
    Intel Pentium M 1.69GHz 2GB RAM

  • High CPU usage on OS X 10.9.4

    So I have high CPU usage of 50-70% and in safe mode goes away, however when I disable all extensions and set add-ons to "ask to activate" it shoots high when not in safe mode, I disabled themes and everything. I am at my wits end as my Macbook Pro has a Core i5 and 16GB of DDR3 RAM, with a 750GB SSD Hard drive, the hardware is perfectly fine, and firefox is the issue. I may have multiple tabs open a lot but even with 1 or 2 tabs it shoots to an average of 40-50% and as high as 140%

    If it works in Safe Mode and in normal mode with all extensions (Firefox/Tools > Add-ons > Extensions) disabled then try to find which extension is causing it by enabling one extension at a time until the problem reappears.
    Close and restart Firefox after each change via "Firefox > Exit" (Windows: Firefox/File > Exit; Mac: Firefox > Quit Firefox; Linux: Firefox/File > Quit)
    *https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Troubleshooting+extensions+and+themes

  • Why does my cq-62 laptop gives me warnings about High CPU usage?

    I have a CQ61-420US Notebook with Nortons 360 installed. Recently I have been getting a warning pop-up from Nortons saying, I have High CPU usage. When I check the box I am taken to a Norton System performance page that indicates 90% CPU usage. Can anyone help?

    Right click on the taskbar empty space and select "Start Task Manager", you can leave it running and minimize it, it will give you an animated graph in the taskbar you can watch.
    Depending on what your are doing on the PC, this may or may not be a problem.
    If you are not doing much on the PC when it uses 90% then there could be a problem.

  • High CPU Usage on Cisco 3845

    Hi all,
    I'm having high CPU usage with one of my Cisco 3845.
    It works as an IP-IP Gateway and the CPU is quite high when the total number of calls only around 100-200 calls.
    I check the CPU usage with "show process cpu sort" and it looks like there are some "hidden" processes that consuming CPU.
    For example, 41% is total CPU, 25% is due to interrups, so CPU utilization on process level = 41 - 25 = 16%.
    But as showed below, processes don't consume that much CPU, only around 7% ???
    Please help to advise on this case. Any help is highly appreciated..
    Thank you.
    3845-GW#show process cpu sort | ex 0.00%  0.00%  0.00%
    CPU utilization for five seconds: 41%/25%; one minute: 46%; five minutes: 47%
     PID Runtime(ms)     Invoked      uSecs     5Sec   1Min   5Min TTY Process
     382     6619708     1473171       4493      1.59%  1.81%  1.92%   0 CCSIP_SPI_CONTRO
     141     4228940    10181955        415      1.35%  1.51%  1.57%   0 IP Input
      65     2450824      163102      15026        1.19%  1.16%  1.17%   0 Per-Second Jobs
     370     2702292     3709512        728        0.87%  0.88%  0.88%   0 VOIP_RTCP
     224      321680      245640       1309          0.47%  0.49%  0.50%   0 AFW_application_
     112       93940    18093506          5             0.39%  0.31%  0.32%   0 Ethernet Msec Ti
     384     1058280     1553567        681         0.23%  0.28%  0.30%   0 CCSIP_UDP_SOCKET
       2       18148       32905        551                 0.07%  0.03%  0.02%   0 Load Meter
     137       35644     4657843          7               0.07%  0.04%  0.05%   0 IPAM Manager
     189      206392      267959        770            0.07%  0.05%  0.07%   0 TCP Protocols
      30       30792      198554        155               0.07%  0.01%  0.00%   0 ARP Input
     368      145456      176151        825             0.07%  0.04%  0.05%   0 CC-API_VCM
      28        9628       32759        293  0.00%  0.01%  0.00%   0 Environmental mo
      48      221352       37922       5837  0.00%  0.11%  0.11%   0 Net Background
      63       16728       32924        508  0.00%  0.01%  0.00%   0 Compute load avg
      64       72080        2781      25918  0.00%  0.01%  0.00%   0 Per-minute Jobs
       6      371644       29792      12474  0.00%  0.14%  0.12%   0 Check heaps
     176       12216      240288         50  0.00%  0.01%  0.00%   0 CEF: IPv4 proces
     284       36416     4929826          7  0.00%  0.02%  0.01%   0 MMON MENG
     307       12168      806151         15  0.00%  0.01%  0.00%   0 Atheros LED Ctro
     335       35300       19755       1786  0.00%  3.16%  1.00% 708 Virtual Exec
    3845-GW#sh int g0/0
    GigabitEthernet0/0 is up, line protocol is up
      MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit/sec, DLY 10 usec,
         reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
      Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
      Keepalive set (10 sec)
      Full Duplex, 1Gbps, media type is RJ45
      output flow-control is XON, input flow-control is XON
      ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
      Last input 00:00:00, output 00:00:00, output hang never
      Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
      Input queue: 0/75/2/56803 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
      Queueing strategy: fifo
      Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
      5 minute input rate 1551000 bits/sec, 5751 packets/sec
      5 minute output rate 4207000 bits/sec, 7643 packets/sec
         925128804 packets input, 939078510 bytes, 0 no buffer
         Received 62732 broadcasts (0 IP multicasts)
         0 runts, 0 giants, 2 throttles
         2 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 2 overrun, 0 ignored
         0 watchdog, 3763438515 multicast, 0 pause input
         1472816545 packets output, 3214770103 bytes, 0 underruns
         0 output errors, 2067720191 collisions, 1 interface resets
         0 unknown protocol drops
         0 babbles, 2281155551 late collision, 0 deferred
         2 lost carrier, 0 no carrier, 0 pause output
         0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
    3845-GW#sh int g0/1
    GigabitEthernet0/1 is up, line protocol is up
      MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit/sec, DLY 10 usec,
         reliability 255/255, txload 1/255, rxload 1/255
      Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
      Keepalive set (10 sec)
      Full Duplex, 1Gbps, media type is RJ45
      output flow-control is XON, input flow-control is XON
      ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
      Last input 00:00:00, output 00:00:00, output hang never
      Last clearing of "show interface" counters never
      Input queue: 0/75/0/30335 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
      Queueing strategy: fifo
      Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
      5 minute input rate 1684000 bits/sec, 7697 packets/sec
      5 minute output rate 3372000 bits/sec, 5632 packets/sec
         1484558664 packets input, 2383177786 bytes, 0 no buffer
         Received 208998 broadcasts (0 IP multicasts)
         0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
         2 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 2 overrun, 0 ignored
         0 watchdog, 3060386282 multicast, 0 pause input
         903478941 packets output, 2814588854 bytes, 0 underruns
         0 output errors, 2910776303 collisions, 1 interface resets
         0 unknown protocol drops
         0 babbles, 4157448025 late collision, 0 deferred
         2 lost carrier, 0 no carrier, 0 pause output
         0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out

    Has this been something that just recently started happening, or have you had this issue for a while?  Have you installed any new programs recently?
    You may want to download Glary Utilities, which is a free software(they will ask you if you want to go Pro, just say no, the free version works very well).  There is a module for startup manager.  You can go in and disable stuff that starts with the computer.  I would advise unchecking adobe, java, quicktime, printers, etc.  Anything that doesn't REALLY need to start with the computer.  The nice thing with Glary is that you can restart the computer, and if you find that you need one of the programs to start with windows, you can go back in and enable it again.
    The Celeron 925 processor in your computer is a decent entry level processor, but if there are too many programs running in the background, it can bog down quick.  I would also recommend downloading and running Malwarebytes Anti-malware, to be sure that there is nothing malicous running in the background. 
    Qosmio X875 i7-3630QM, 32GB RAM, OCZ SSD Qosmio X505 i7-920XM, PM55, 16GB RAM, OCZ SSD
    Satellite Pro L350 T9900, GM45, 8GB RAM , Intel 320 SSD (my baby) Satellite L655 i7-620M, HM55, 8GB RAM, Intel 710 SSD (travel system)

  • High CPU usage in cisco 7613 with rsp720-3cxl

    Hi everybody,
    our cisco 7613 has about  4.5 Gbps  Tx/Rx IP traffic in total, and we run ospf with other cisco cloud for routing I list in the following some our router show.what is your idea about our high cpu usage .Is it in normal range with the listed cards and modules.How can I tune the rsp720 and other SIP-200,400,600 for better performances
    why our interrupt rate is high ,and one thing more the total sum of 5sec in separate rows not equal to cpu utilization for five second 50% 
    show proc cpu sor
    CPU utilization for five seconds: 50%/46%; one minute: 54%; five minutes: 59%
     PID Runtime(ms)     Invoked      uSecs   5Sec   1Min   5Min TTY Process
       8   196795220    12640741      15568  1.51%  0.38%  0.26%   0 Check heaps
     224  1048610528  4169501364          0  1.19%  1.45%  1.44%   0 IP Input
      13   374006320  3155162661          0  0.23%  0.26%  0.24%   0 ARP Input
     217   119862004   985030884        121  0.15%  0.32%  0.25%   0 ADJ resolve pro
    c
     185      537716  1825736183          0  0.07%  0.03%  0.02%   0 ACE Tunnel Task
     260     1550992  2983272818          0  0.07%  0.13%  0.15%   0 Ethernet Msec T
    i
     305    38186336    58050485        657  0.07%  0.02%  0.00%   0 XDR mcast
      34       67208    11707798          5  0.07%  0.00%  0.00%   0 IPC Loadometer
      27      232776    57160812          4  0.07%  0.01%  0.00%   0 IPC Periodic Ti
    m
     325    17539200    92894502        188  0.07%  0.15%  0.15%   0 CEF: IPv4 proce
    s
     195     7406636    43782487        169  0.07%  0.00%  0.00%   0 esw_vlan_stat_p
    r
    show ip route summ
    IP routing table name is default (0x0)
    IP routing table maximum-paths is 32
    Route Source    Networks    Subnets     Replicates  Overhead    Memory (bytes)
    static          1           120         0           7620        20812
    connected       0           313         0           18860       53836
    ospf 98         17          4892        0           589020      863984
      Intra-area: 89 Inter-area: 383 External-1: 0 External-2: 0
      NSSA External-1: 0 NSSA External-2: 4437
    bgp 12880       0           1           0           60          172
      External: 1 Internal: 0 Local: 0
    ospf 410        0           269         0           16220       47344
      Intra-area: 1 Inter-area: 0 External-1: 0 External-2: 268
      NSSA External-1: 0 NSSA External-2: 0
    internal        137                                             260544
    Total           155         5595        0           631780      1246692
    sh module
    Mod Ports Card Type                              Model              Serial No.
      1    0  4-subslot SPA Interface Processor-200  7600-SIP-200       
      2    0  4-subslot SPA Interface Processor-400  7600-SIP-400       
      3   24  CEF720 24 port 1000mb SFP              WS-X6724-SFP       
      6    1  1-subslot SPA Interface Processor-600  7600-SIP-600       
      7    2  Route Switch Processor 720 (Active)    RSP720-3CXL-GE     
      8    2  Route Switch Processor 720 (Cold)      RSP720-3CXL-GE     
    show ver
    System image file is "bootdisk:c7600rsp72043-adventerprisek9-mz.122-33.SRE2.bin"
    1 SIP-200 controller .
    1 SIP-400 controller (1 Channelized OC3/STM-1).
    1 SIP-600 controller (1 TenGigabitEthernet).
    2 Virtual Ethernet interfaces
    28 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces
    1 Ten Gigabit Ethernet interface
    1 Channelized STM-1 port
    1 Channelized STM-1 port
    show int vlan 1
      Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
      Keepalive not supported
      ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
      Last input 00:00:00, output 00:00:00, output hang never
      Last clearing of "show interface" counters 2d23h
      Input queue: 0/75/2886/1830 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
      Queueing strategy: fifo
      Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
      5 minute input rate 2380531000 bits/sec, 287383 packets/sec
      5 minute output rate 422133000 bits/sec, 254113 packets/sec
      L2 Switched: ucast: 1200869468 pkt, 101172643240 bytes - mcast: 253599 pkt, 78
    873415 bytes
      L3 in Switched: ucast: 60947040633 pkt, 68919665115039 bytes - mcast: 0 pkt, 0
     bytes mcast
      L3 out Switched: ucast: 52594517004 pkt, 9869168832783 bytes mcast: 0 pkt, 0 b
    ytes
         62147839148 packets input, 69016175499764 bytes, 0 no buffer
         Received 257634 broadcasts (0 IP multicasts)
         0 runts, 0 giants, 15 throttles
         0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored
         53647248858 packets output, 10292998021217 bytes, 0 underruns
         0 output errors, 0 interface resets
         0 unknown protocol drops
         0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out

    Thank you for your hints and replying
    These are our show ibc in 1 min interval
    Interface information:
            Interface IBC0/0
            5 minute rx rate 20045000 bits/sec, 30183 packets/sec
            5 minute tx rate 47394000 bits/sec, 60212 packets/sec
            19879272237 packets input, 4006174536193 bytes
            19835355282 broadcasts received
            19808585787 packets output, 3981305571968 bytes
            90548 broadcasts sent
            0 Bridge Packet loopback drops
            19756362091 Packets CEF Switched, 1320184 Packets Fast Switched
            0 Packets SLB Switched, 0 Packets CWAN Switched
            Label switched pkts dropped: 0    Pkts dropped during dma: 339549
            Invalid pkts dropped: 0    Pkts dropped(not cwan consumed): 0
            IPSEC pkts dropped: 635184
            Xconnect pkts processed: 0, dropped: 0
            Xconnect pkt reflection drops: 0
            Total paks copied for process level 0
            Total short paks sent in route cache 2605317676
            Total throttle drops 265338    Input queue drops 5831090
            total spd packets classified (120217214 low, 174503 medium, 3073 high)
            total spd packets dropped (339549 low, 0 medium, 0 high)
            spd prio pkts allowed in due to selective throttling (0 med, 0 high)
            IBC resets   = 1; last at 23:52:49.004 Sat Jan 19 2013
    Driver Level Counters: (Cumulative, Zeroed only at Reset)
              Frames          Bytes
      Rx(0)   26537712        3421085217
      Rx(1)   3449063135      2838813650
      Tx(0)   3390340306      2016620276
     Input Drop Frame Count
         Rx0 = 0                Rx1 = 2488435
     Per Queue Receive Errors:
         FRME   OFLW   BUFE   NOENP  DISCRD DISABLE BADCOUNT
     Rx0 0      0      0      0      0        0    0
     Rx1 0      0      0      3633   0        0    0
      Tx Errors/State:
       One Collision Error   = 0            More Collisions       = 0
       No Encap Error        = 0            Deferred Error        = 0
       Loss Carrier Error    = 0            Late Collision Error  = 0
       Excessive Collisions  = 0            Buffer Error          = 0
       Tx Freeze Count       = 0            Tx Intrpt Serv timeout= 1
       Tx Flow State         = FLOW_ON
       Tx Flow Off Count     = 0            Tx Flow On Count      = 0
      Counters collected at Idb:
       Is input throttled    = 0            Throttle Count        = 0
       Rx Resource Errors    = 0            Input Drops           = 2488435
       Input Errors           = 194243
       Output Drops          = 0            Giants/Runts          = 0/0
       Dma Mem Error         = 0            Input Overrun         = 0
    Hash match table for multicast (in use 0, maximum 64 entries):
    show ibc 
    Interface information:
            Interface IBC0/0
            5 minute rx rate 20194000 bits/sec, 30412 packets/sec
            5 minute tx rate 47753000 bits/sec, 60663 packets/sec
            19891125514 packets input, 4007158118761 bytes
            19847185365 broadcasts received
            19820407164 packets output, 3982279276274 bytes
            90576 broadcasts sent
            0 Bridge Packet loopback drops
            19768178233 Packets CEF Switched, 1321008 Packets Fast Switched
            0 Packets SLB Switched, 0 Packets CWAN Switched
            Label switched pkts dropped: 0    Pkts dropped during dma: 339549
            Invalid pkts dropped: 0    Pkts dropped(not cwan consumed): 0
            IPSEC pkts dropped: 635574
            Xconnect pkts processed: 0, dropped: 0
            Xconnect pkt reflection drops: 0
            Total paks copied for process level 0
            Total short paks sent in route cache 2606549061
            Total throttle drops 265338    Input queue drops 5831090
            total spd packets classified (120252754 low, 174531 medium, 3074 high)
            total spd packets dropped (339549 low, 0 medium, 0 high)
            spd prio pkts allowed in due to selective throttling (0 med, 0 high)
            IBC resets   = 1; last at 23:52:49.004 Sat Jan 19 2013
    Driver Level Counters: (Cumulative, Zeroed only at Reset)
              Frames          Bytes
      Rx(0)   26550723        3422835145
      Rx(1)   3461063605      176652699
      Tx(0)   3402319442      3368513724
     Input Drop Frame Count
         Rx0 = 0                Rx1 = 2490155
     Per Queue Receive Errors:
         FRME   OFLW   BUFE   NOENP  DISCRD DISABLE BADCOUNT
     Rx0 0      0      0      0      0        0    0
     Rx1 0      0      0      3633   0        0    0
      Tx Errors/State:
       One Collision Error   = 0            More Collisions       = 0
       No Encap Error        = 0            Deferred Error        = 0
       Loss Carrier Error    = 0            Late Collision Error  = 0
       Excessive Collisions  = 0            Buffer Error          = 0
       Tx Freeze Count       = 0            Tx Intrpt Serv timeout= 1
       Tx Flow State         = FLOW_ON
       Tx Flow Off Count     = 0            Tx Flow On Count      = 0
      Counters collected at Idb:
       Is input throttled    = 0            Throttle Count        = 0
       Rx Resource Errors    = 0            Input Drops           = 2490155
       Input Errors           = 194358
       Output Drops          = 0            Giants/Runts          = 0/0
       Dma Mem Error         = 0            Input Overrun         = 0
    Hash match table for multicast (in use 0, maximum 64 entries):
    and sorry what is your idea about total sum of 5sec in separate rows not equal to cpu utilization for five second 50% 

  • High CPU Usage / Dropped Packets - Switch Blade WS-CBS3120X-S

    Hi all,
    I have a couple of Switches Blade 3120, working as active-standby model (HSRP) on a new site deployment. There are other 20 sites more or less, working on the same model, without issues. But in this one, we are seeing a high cpu usage. The traffic going through the platform is 600Mbps (on peaks), and in this case we have 40% of CPU usage. Traffic should be close to 3 Gbps. When we tried to send the whole traffic through the platform, active switch began to drop packets on the majority of interfaces.
    When we analyze the CPU usage, there is a special process called "HL3U bkgrd proce" always have the most CPU use, but we do not know what concerns. We do not know if it is caused because there are PBRs configured. It should not matter. How I mentioned, there are other sites working fine and have had always the same PBR number.
    Could you guys help us?. Any idea what is causing the high usage?. Is there a special debug we could to perform to diagnose the issue?. Also, we have seen a high interrupt CPU usage (9% in this case).
    Find attached the whole diagnosis outputs.
    Thanks for your assistance guys.
    Cheers,
    Juan Pablo
    bog-sib-INT-rtr-1#show processes cpu sorted 5sec
    CPU utilization for five seconds: 30%/9%; one minute: 25%; five minutes: 23%
    PID Runtime(ms)     Invoked      uSecs   5Sec   1Min   5Min TTY Process
    157   140004809   107071220       1307 14.24% 10.19%  9.01%   0 HL3U bkgrd proce
    119     6860957     1519183       4516  0.79%  0.59%  0.53%   0 hpm counter proc
    166     2511492      302802       8294  0.15%  0.15%  0.15%   0 HQM Stack Proces
    199     4182906    15255882        274  0.15%  0.21%  0.20%   0 IP Input        
    357      237531      782101        303  0.15%  0.03%  0.00%   0 IP SNMP         
    186         101         148        682  0.15%  0.09%  0.02%   1 Virtual Exec    
    242       63071     2330717         27  0.15%  0.02%  0.00%   0 CEF: IPv4 proces
      12      163754      620353        263  0.15%  0.01%  0.00%   0 ARP Input       
       9           0           2          0  0.00%  0.00%  0.00%   0 License Client N
       8          41        1827         22  0.00%  0.00%  0.00%   0 WATCH_AFS       
      11          50           4      12500  0.00%  0.00%  0.00%   0 Image License br
       7           0           2          0  0.00%  0.00%  0.00%   0 Timers          
    bog-sib-INT-rtr-1#sh ip cef summary
    IPv4 CEF is enabled for distributed and running
    VRF Default
    119 prefixes (119/0 fwd/non-fwd)
    Table id 0x0
    Database epoch:        2 (119 entries at this epoch)

    Hi Leolaohoo,
    I had not played with this one too !!!!...
    1). IOS version (It was recently updated)
    bog-sib-INT-rtr-1#sh ver
    Cisco IOS Software, CBS31X0 Software (CBS31X0-UNIVERSALK9-M), Version 12.2(58)SE1, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
    Technical Support: http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
    Copyright (c) 1986-2011 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
    Compiled Thu 05-May-11 04:08 by prod_rel_team
    ROM: Bootstrap program is CBS31X0 boot loader
    BOOTLDR: CBS31X0 Boot Loader (CBS31X0-HBOOT-M) Version 12.2(0.0.951)SE3, CISCO DEVELOPMENT TEST VERSION
    bog-sib-INT-rtr-1 uptime is 2 weeks, 3 days, 17 hours, 14 minutes
    System returned to ROM by power-on
    System restarted at 00:59:27 UTC Sat Jun 9 2012
    System image file is "flash:cbs31x0-universalk9-mz.122-58.SE1.bin"
    2). What interface do you want to see?, do you want to see all interfaces? . This switch has 16 interfaces that connect servers, and other going to our client. Below, the state of the two kind of interfaces:
    Interface to Client (Bearer)
    TenGigabitEthernet1/0/1 is up, line protocol is up (connected)
      Hardware is Ten Gigabit Ethernet, address is 001f.275d.d81b (bia 001f.275d.d81b)
      Description: BearerNContent_Aggregrate
      MTU 1500 bytes, BW 10000000 Kbit/sec, DLY 10 usec,
         reliability 255/255, txload 10/255, rxload 14/255
      Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
      Keepalive not set
      Full-duplex, 10Gb/s, link type is auto, media type is 10GBase-LR
      input flow-control is off, output flow-control is unsupported
      ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
      Last input 00:00:00, output 2w3d, output hang never
      Last clearing of "show interface" counters 07:07:56
      Input queue: 0/75/0/0 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 0
      Queueing strategy: fifo
      Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
      5 minute input rate 562469000 bits/sec, 83641 packets/sec
      5 minute output rate 430500000 bits/sec, 73141 packets/sec
         2020563158 packets input, 1739897855828 bytes, 0 no buffer
         Received 13257 broadcasts (13257 multicasts)
         0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
         0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored
         0 watchdog, 13257 multicast, 0 pause input
         0 input packets with dribble condition detected
         1745065310 packets output, 1347244137726 bytes, 0 underruns
         0 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 interface resets
         0 unknown protocol drops
         0 babbles, 0 late collision, 0 deferred
         0 lost carrier, 0 no carrier, 0 pause output
         0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
    Interface to Server
    GigabitEthernet1/0/8 is up, line protocol is up (connected)
      Hardware is Gigabit Ethernet, address is 001f.275d.d808 (bia 001f.275d.d808)
      Description: bog-15
      MTU 1500 bytes, BW 1000000 Kbit/sec, DLY 10 usec,
         reliability 255/255, txload 15/255, rxload 12/255
      Encapsulation ARPA, loopback not set
      Keepalive set (10 sec)
      Full-duplex, 1000Mb/s, link type is auto, media type is 1000BaseX
      input flow-control is off, output flow-control is unsupported
      ARP type: ARPA, ARP Timeout 04:00:00
      Last input never, output 00:00:17, output hang never
      Last clearing of "show interface" counters 07:09:12
      Input queue: 0/75/0/0 (size/max/drops/flushes); Total output drops: 19418
      Queueing strategy: fifo
      Output queue: 0/40 (size/max)
      5 minute input rate 47705000 bits/sec, 7155 packets/sec
      5 minute output rate 58897000 bits/sec, 8011 packets/sec
         178178750 packets input, 153802177226 bytes, 0 no buffer
         Received 4091 broadcasts (0 multicasts)
         0 runts, 0 giants, 0 throttles
         0 input errors, 0 CRC, 0 frame, 0 overrun, 0 ignored
         0 watchdog, 0 multicast, 0 pause input
         0 input packets with dribble condition detected
         212233312 packets output, 206621942776 bytes, 0 underruns
         0 output errors, 0 collisions, 0 interface resets
         0 unknown protocol drops
         0 babbles, 0 late collision, 0 deferred
         0 lost carrier, 0 no carrier, 0 pause output
         0 output buffer failures, 0 output buffers swapped out
    Thanks for your help. I am losing my hair with this issue.
    Cheers,
    Juan P.

  • SBS 2011 - High CPU usage - Help me Microsoft forums! You're my only hope!

    My company supports a client that has a SBS 2011 server.  For about the past year, we've been fighting a recurring issue with performance on this server.  There are about ten local users and four remote users.  The server's CPU idles at
    about 60%-80% but is usally running when under *any* load from 80%-100%.  If you do anything on the console, it will stay pretty much at 100%.  These are not power users by any means.  The server is utilized for file/printer sharing, Exchange
    2010, and one flat file database application (non-SQL).  SharePoint is not utilized.
    Needless to say, our client is frustrated.  When opening files, using their database application, or doing anything Exchange-related, there is a large amount of lag on the client side.  First, here are the server's specs:
    Make:Dell PowerEdge T420
    OS: SBS 2011 Standard SP1
    CPU: 2 - Intel Xeon E5-2407
    Memory: 32GB
    RAID: RAID 1 - Operating System (C:)/Data Volume (E:) | RAID 5 - Data Volume (D:)
    Here is what we have tried to resolve this to finality:
    * Doubled resources - Initially the server had a single physical processor and 16GB of memory.  While these specs alone should have been fine, and were fine when the server was installed, we had periods of time where the server would just sit all day at
    100% usage.  We doubled the resources and while this seemed like it would fix the issue, we are still seeing abnormally high processor usage.
    * Removed all monitoring tools, antivirus, and backup software - As part of our testing, we removed our monitoring agent (LabTech) and antivirus (GFI Vipre).  Mozy is utilized for an off-site backup so that was disabled.  No dice.
    * Verified updates - We made absolutely sure the server was 100% patched.
    * Malware/Virus/Rootkit checks - We have ran scans checking for any potential issues with security.
    * Ran MBSA and MBCA to fix any issues with the server's configuration.
    There is no single process which is using all of the CPU, or we would simply be able to narrow it down.  Our calls to Microsoft support have yielded no answers.  The last call ended with Microsoft stating that a SBS server should always be running
    at high CPU usage.  Meanwhile, we have many other clients with less-beefy servers, with more users, who have no issues like these.
    So, I'm turning to you all.  I will gladly provide logs, configuration settings, even remote assistance sessions if you all can help shed some light on what might be causing my issues.
    Thank you!

    Some comments/ideas:
    How long was the server running after this screenshot?  I ask because store.exe is only got a 1GB of RAM which is really low - it should grab most of the RAM within a few hours.
    The server was up for about 12 hours.  I believe an adjustment was made before to limit the Exchange memory usage.
    Strange that SearchIndexer (wsearch service) is so high although that may be a startup condition.
    The LT* processes seem to be a 3rd party monitoring tool - no idea why it would ever need that much CPU though (I thought you disabled this?).
    We had, but we cannot go forever without monitoring our client's server.  It has been pulled off in the past and results on performance are pretty much the same.
    The taskmgr process run by amnet_admin has used a lot of total CPU Time.  What is it? (can't see the command line).
    That's the user I was logged in as when I took the screenshot.  Even the task manager seems to eat up the CPU.
    The sqlserver process right above it is also busy - may want to look at the command line and figure out which SQL database that is (SBS has 3 - WSUS, Sharepoint, and SBS monitoring)
    I believe that's the SharePoint database.  They don't currently use their site.  Would you recommend a removal and reinstallation?  I would not completely remove as I know SBS doesn't like you removing parts of the complete package.
    Strange that vds.exe is 10% - that is the interface to the disk management interface IIRC.  Perhaps your monitoring service has gone awry here - definitely lose it.
    I'll see about pulling it off and I'll see if there are any improvements.
    -- Al

  • High cpu usage during JSF lifecycle phase execution

    In our performance test we encountered a high cpu usage (100%) and the thread dumps indicated that most of the times the threads are either executing restore view or render response phase of the JSF lifecycle or they are blocked while accessing the jar files which containing the xhtml pages.
    One of the thread dump of a runnable thread is
    java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
    at java.util.HashMap.get(HashMap.java:317)
    at javax.faces.component.ComponentStateHelper.get(ComponentStateHelper.java:174)
    at javax.faces.component.ComponentStateHelper.add(ComponentStateHelper.java:216)
    at javax.faces.component.UIComponent.setValueExpression(UIComponent.java:436)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.CompositeComponentTagHandler$CompositeComponentRule$CompositeExpressionMetadata.applyMetadata(CompositeComponentTagHandler.java:631)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.MetadataImpl.applyMetadata(MetadataImpl.java:81)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.MetaTagHandler.setAttributes(MetaTagHandler.java:129)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.setAttributes(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:102)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.CompositeComponentTagHandler.setAttributes(CompositeComponentTagHandler.java:246)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.CompositeComponentTagHandler.applyNextHandler(CompositeComponentTagHandler.java:184)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:308)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:367)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:346)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:199)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.IncludeHandler.apply(IncludeHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.applyNextHandler(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:137)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.DefineHandler.applyDefinition(DefineHandler.java:107)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.CompositionHandler.apply(CompositionHandler.java:178)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext$TemplateManager.apply(DefaultFaceletContext.java:395)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeDefinition(DefaultFaceletContext.java:366)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.InsertHandler.apply(InsertHandler.java:112)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.applyNextHandler(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:137)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:308)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:367)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:346)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:199)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.CompositionHandler.apply(CompositionHandler.java:155)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:308)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:367)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:346)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:199)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.IncludeHandler.apply(IncludeHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.apply(DefaultFacelet.java:152)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.buildView(FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.java:774)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.RenderResponsePhase.execute(RenderResponsePhase.java:100)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.Phase.doPhase(Phase.java:101)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.render(LifecycleImpl.java:139)
    at javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet.service(FacesServlet.java:594)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapper.service(StandardWrapper.java:1550)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.internalDoFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:343)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.doFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:217)while a thread trace for a blocked thread is
    java.lang.Thread.State: BLOCKED (on object monitor)
    at java.util.zip.ZipFile.getEntry(ZipFile.java:302)
    - waiting to lock <0x00000000c0f678f8> (a java.util.jar.JarFile)
    at java.util.jar.JarFile.getEntry(JarFile.java:225)
    at java.util.jar.JarFile.getJarEntry(JarFile.java:208)
    at sun.misc.URLClassPath$JarLoader.getResource(URLClassPath.java:817)
    at sun.misc.URLClassPath$JarLoader.findResource(URLClassPath.java:795)
    at sun.misc.URLClassPath.findResource(URLClassPath.java:172)
    at java.net.URLClassLoader$2.run(URLClassLoader.java:551)
    at java.net.URLClassLoader$2.run(URLClassLoader.java:549)
    at java.security.AccessController.doPrivileged(Native Method)
    at java.net.URLClassLoader.findResource(URLClassLoader.java:548)
    at java.lang.ClassLoader.getResource(ClassLoader.java:1138)
    at java.lang.ClassLoader.getResource(ClassLoader.java:1133)
    at org.glassfish.web.loader.WebappClassLoader.getResource(WebappClassLoader.java:1156)
    at org.glassfish.web.loader.WebappClassLoader.getResourceFromJars(WebappClassLoader.java:1111)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContext.getMetaInfResource(StandardContext.java:7586)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContext.getResource(StandardContext.java:6979)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationContext.getResource(ApplicationContext.java:382)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationContextFacade.getResource(ApplicationContextFacade.java:260)
    at com.sun.faces.context.ExternalContextImpl.getResource(ExternalContextImpl.java:502)
    at com.sun.faces.application.resource.WebappResourceHelper.getURL(WebappResourceHelper.java:119)
    at com.sun.faces.application.resource.ResourceImpl.getURL(ResourceImpl.java:190)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.CompositeComponentTagHandler.applyCompositeComponent(CompositeComponentTagHandler.java:366)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.CompositeComponentTagHandler.applyNextHandler(CompositeComponentTagHandler.java:191)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:308)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:367)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:346)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:199)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.IncludeHandler.apply(IncludeHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.applyNextHandler(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:137)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.DefineHandler.applyDefinition(DefineHandler.java:107)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.CompositionHandler.apply(CompositionHandler.java:178)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext$TemplateManager.apply(DefaultFaceletContext.java:395)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeDefinition(DefaultFaceletContext.java:366)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.InsertHandler.apply(InsertHandler.java:112)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.applyNextHandler(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:137)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.jsf.ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.apply(ComponentTagHandlerDelegateImpl.java:184)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.DelegatingMetaTagHandler.apply(DelegatingMetaTagHandler.java:120)
    at javax.faces.view.facelets.CompositeFaceletHandler.apply(CompositeFaceletHandler.java:98)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:308)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:367)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.include(DefaultFacelet.java:346)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFaceletContext.includeFacelet(DefaultFaceletContext.java:199)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.tag.ui.CompositionHandler.apply(CompositionHandler.java:155)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.NamespaceHandler.apply(NamespaceHandler.java:93)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.compiler.EncodingHandler.apply(EncodingHandler.java:86)
    at com.sun.faces.facelets.impl.DefaultFacelet.apply(DefaultFacelet.java:152)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.buildView(FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.java:774)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.StateManagementStrategyImpl.restoreView(StateManagementStrategyImpl.java:223)
    at com.sun.faces.application.StateManagerImpl.restoreView(StateManagerImpl.java:188)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.ViewHandlingStrategy.restoreView(ViewHandlingStrategy.java:123)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.restoreView(FaceletViewHandlingStrategy.java:453)
    at com.sun.faces.application.view.MultiViewHandler.restoreView(MultiViewHandler.java:148)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.RestoreViewPhase.execute(RestoreViewPhase.java:192)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.Phase.doPhase(Phase.java:101)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.RestoreViewPhase.doPhase(RestoreViewPhase.java:116)
    at com.sun.faces.lifecycle.LifecycleImpl.execute(LifecycleImpl.java:118)
    at javax.faces.webapp.FacesServlet.service(FacesServlet.java:593)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapper.service(StandardWrapper.java:1550)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.internalDoFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:343)
    at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.doFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:217)We use glassfish 3.1.1 as our application and the project_stage property is set to System_test. I would like to get suggestions on how should I investigate this further. Is this a normal behavior? Does glassfish provide an alternative for resolving blocked threads like some caching mechanism for resources etc?
    Thanks in advance

    Nik wrote:
    Even if it is legal, have you tried moving them out of there (just to pinpoint a possible bug since the stacktrace indicates a wait on a jar file)?Indeed. If that clears up the issue it is good information to put in a JSF bug report (which may even cascade to the Glassfish level).
    Putting resources in a jar file is only really useful when you want to share those resources among different web applications, which should be a rare case. Even when it happens I would probably still choose to simply copy the resources so they are individually managed and you don't get unnecessary dependencies between applications. Just because something is technically possible doesn't make it a good idea.

  • High cpu usage for garbage collection (uptime vs total gc time)

    Hi Team,
    We have a very high cpu usage issue in the production.
    When we restart the server, the cpu idle time would be around 95% and it comes down as days goes by. Today idle cpu is 30% and it is just 6th day after the server restart.
    Environemnt details:
    Jrockit version:
    Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.4.2_05-b04)
    BEA WebLogic JRockit(TM) 1.4.2_05 JVM R24.4.0-1 (build ari-38120-20041118-1131-linux-ia32, Native Threads, GC strategy: parallel)
    Gc Algorithm: JRockit Garbage Collection System currently running strategy: Single generational, parallel mark, parallel sweep
    Number Of Processors: 4
    Max Heap Size: 1073741824
    Total Garbage Collection Time: 21:43:56.5
    Uptime: 114:33:4.1
    Total Garbage Collection Count: 420872
    Total Number Of Threads: 198
    Number Of Daemon Threads: 191
    Can you guys please tell me what would be problem in the server which causing the high cpu usage?
    One more thing I would like to know is that why the total number of threads is 198 when we specified the Executor pool size as 25? I agree that weblogic would create some threads for its maintenance but around 160 threads!!! something is wrong I guess.
    Santhosh.
    [email protected]

    Hi,
    I'm having a similar problem, but haven't been able to resolve it yet. Troubleshooting is made even harder by the fact that this is only happening on our production server, and I've been unable to reproduce it in the lab.
    I'll post whatever findings I have and hopefully we'll be able to find a solution with the help of BEA engineers.
    In my case, I have a stand-alone Tomcat server that runs fine for about 1-2 days, and then the JVM suddenly starts using more CPU, and as a result, the server load shoots up (normal CPU utilization is ~5% but eventually goes up to ~95%; load goes from 0.1 to 4+).
    What I have found so far is that this corresponds to increased GC activity.
    Let me list my environment specs before I proceed, though:
    CPU: Dual Xeon 3.06GHz
    RAM: 2GB
    OS: RHEL4.4 (2.6.9-42.0.2.ELsmp)
    JVM build 1.5.0_03-b07 (BEA JRockit(R) (build dra-45238-20050523-2008-linux-ia32, R25.2.0-28))
    Tomcat version 5.5.12
    JAVA_OPTS="-Xms768m -Xmx768m -XXtlasize16k -XXlargeobjectlimit16k -Xverbose:memory,cpuinfo -Xverboselog:/var/log/tomcat5/jvm.log -Xverbosetimestamp"
    Here are excerpts from my verbose log (I'm getting some HT warning, not sure if that's a problem):
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Detected SMP with 2 CPUs that support HT.
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Trying to determine if HT is enabled.
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Trying to read from /dev/cpu/0/cpuid
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Warning: Failed to read from /dev/cpu/0/cpuid
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Trying to read from /dev/cpu/1/cpuid
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Warning: Failed to read from /dev/cpu/1/cpuid
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] HT is: supported by the CPU, not enabled by the OS, enabled in JRockit.
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:18 2006][22855][cpuinfo] Warning: HT enabled even though OS does not seem to support it.
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:55 2006][22855][memory ] GC strategy: System optimized over throughput (initial strategy singleparpar)
    [Fri Oct 20 15:54:55 2006][22855][memory ] heap size: 786432K, maximal heap size: 786432K
    [Fri Oct 20 16:07:30 2006][22855][memory ] Changing GC strategy to generational, parallel mark and parallel sweep
    [Fri Oct 20 16:07:30 2006][22855][memory ] 791.642-791.874: GC 786432K->266892K (786432K), 232.000 ms
    [Fri Oct 20 16:08:02 2006][22855][memory ] 824.122: nursery GC 291998K->274164K (786432K), 175.873 ms
    [Fri Oct 20 16:09:51 2006][22855][memory ] 932.526: nursery GC 299321K->281775K (786432K), 110.879 ms
    [Fri Oct 20 16:10:24 2006][22855][memory ] 965.844: nursery GC 308151K->292222K (786432K), 174.609 ms
    [Fri Oct 20 16:11:54 2006][22855][memory ] 1056.368: nursery GC 314718K->300068K (786432K), 66.032 ms
    [Sat Oct 21 23:21:09 2006][22855][memory ] 113210.427: nursery GC 734274K->676137K (786432K), 188.985 ms
    [Sat Oct 21 23:30:41 2006][22855][memory ] 113783.140: nursery GC 766601K->708592K (786432K), 96.007 ms
    [Sat Oct 21 23:36:15 2006][22855][memory ] 114116.332-114116.576: GC 756832K->86835K (786432K), 243.333 ms
    [Sat Oct 21 23:48:20 2006][22855][memory ] 114841.653: nursery GC 182299K->122396K (786432K), 175.252 ms
    [Sat Oct 21 23:48:52 2006][22855][memory ] 114873.851: nursery GC 195060K->130483K (786432K), 142.122 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:01:31 2006][22855][memory ] 115632.706: nursery GC 224096K->166618K (786432K), 327.264 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:16:37 2006][22855][memory ] 116539.368: nursery GC 246564K->186328K (786432K), 173.888 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:26:21 2006][22855][memory ] 117122.577: nursery GC 279056K->221543K (786432K), 170.367 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:26:21 2006][22855][memory ] 117123.041: nursery GC 290439K->225833K (786432K), 69.170 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:29:10 2006][22855][memory ] 117291.795: nursery GC 298947K->238083K (786432K), 207.200 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:39:05 2006][22855][memory ] 117886.478: nursery GC 326956K->263441K (786432K), 87.009 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 00:55:22 2006][22855][memory ] 118863.947: nursery GC 357229K->298971K (786432K), 246.643 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:08:17 2006][22855][memory ] 119638.750: nursery GC 381744K->322332K (786432K), 147.996 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:11:22 2006][22855][memory ] 119824.249: nursery GC 398678K->336478K (786432K), 93.046 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:35 2006][22855][memory ] 120436.740: nursery GC 409150K->345186K (786432K), 81.304 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:38 2006][22855][memory ] 120439.582: nursery GC 409986K->345832K (786432K), 153.534 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:42 2006][22855][memory ] 120443.544: nursery GC 410632K->346473K (786432K), 121.371 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:44 2006][22855][memory ] 120445.508: nursery GC 411273K->347591K (786432K), 60.688 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:44 2006][22855][memory ] 120445.623: nursery GC 412391K->347785K (786432K), 68.935 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:45 2006][22855][memory ] 120446.576: nursery GC 412585K->348897K (786432K), 152.333 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:21:45 2006][22855][memory ] 120446.783: nursery GC 413697K->349080K (786432K), 70.456 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:34:16 2006][22855][memory ] 121197.612: nursery GC 437378K->383392K (786432K), 165.771 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:37:37 2006][22855][memory ] 121398.496: nursery GC 469709K->409076K (786432K), 78.257 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:37:37 2006][22855][memory ] 121398.730: nursery GC 502490K->437713K (786432K), 65.747 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:44:03 2006][22855][memory ] 121785.259: nursery GC 536605K->478156K (786432K), 132.293 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:44:04 2006][22855][memory ] 121785.603: nursery GC 568408K->503635K (786432K), 71.751 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 01:50:39 2006][22855][memory ] 122180.985: nursery GC 591332K->530811K (786432K), 131.831 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:13:52 2006][22855][memory ] 123573.719: nursery GC 655566K->595257K (786432K), 117.311 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:36:04 2006][22855][memory ] 124905.507: nursery GC 688896K->632129K (786432K), 346.990 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:24 2006][22855][memory ] 125765.715-125765.904: GC 786032K->143954K (786432K), 189.000 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:26 2006][22855][memory ] 125767.535-125767.761: GC 723232K->70948K (786432K), 225.000 ms
    vvvvv
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:27 2006][22855][memory ] 125768.751-125768.817: GC 712032K->71390K (786432K), 64.919 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:28 2006][22855][memory ] 125769.516-125769.698: GC 711632K->61175K (786432K), 182.000 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:29 2006][22855][memory ] 125770.753-125770.880: GC 709632K->81558K (786432K), 126.000 ms
    [Sun Oct 22 02:50:30 2006][22855][memory ] 125771.699-125771.878: GC 708432K->61368K (786432K), 179.000 ms
    So, I'm running with the default GC strategy which lets the GC pick the most suitable approach (single space or generational). It seems to switch to generational almost immediately and runs well - most GC runs are in the nursery, and only once in a while it goes through the older space.
    Now, if you look at [Sun Oct 22 02:50:27 2006], that's when everything changes. GC starts running every second (later on it's running 3 times a second) doing huge sweeps. It never goes through the nursery again, although the strategy is still generational.
    It's all downhill from this point on, and it's a matter of hours (maybe a day) before we restart the server.
    I guess my only question is: What would cause such GC behavior?
    I would appreciate your ideas/comments!
    Thanks,
    Tenyo

  • High CPU Usage on C6509

    Good day, can someone analyze this for me, in regards with high cpu usage.
    2222222222222222222222222222222222333332222244444222222222
         8888555559999955555777773333344444000007777711111555559999
    100                                                           
    90                                                           
    80                                                           
    70                                                           
    60                                                           
    50                                                           
    40                                              *****        
    30  ************************          ************************
    20  **********************************************************
    10  **********************************************************
        0....5....1....1....2....2....3....3....4....4....5....5....
                  0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5   
                   CPU% per second (last 60 seconds)
         4443333334443433334333333333333333333333343333333333333333
         1006530591135079734601132535328062177773414263667168577916
    100                                                           
    90                                                           
    80                                                           
    70                                                           
    60                                                           
    50                                                           
    40  *****  ********** **     * *  * *  ****  *  * *** ****** *
    30  #############**##*####*#*##*###*#*#########*##*****###****
    20  ##########################################################
    10  ##########################################################
        0....5....1....1....2....2....3....3....4....4....5....5....
                  0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5   
                   CPU% per minute (last 60 minutes)
                  * = maximum CPU%   # = average CPU%
         4744444545444444444444444444333344444444444444444434444444433344344444
         4547425182436632379924402500899822115303104140406471591734499730802883
    100                                                                       
    90                                                                       
    80   *                                                                   
    70   *                                                                   
    60   *                                                                   
    50   * *  ****  **   ***     *          *           *   ** *           **
    40  **********************************************************************
    30  #*******###**********##**********#********************************####
    20  ######################################################################
    10  ######################################################################
        0....5....1....1....2....2....3....3....4....4....5....5....6....6....7.
                  0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5    0    5    0
                       CPU% per hour (last 72 hours)
                      * = maximum CPU%   # = average CPU%
    Local_Backbone#sh proc cpu sorted 5sec
    CPU utilization for five seconds: 24%/16%; one minute: 27%; five minutes: 27%
    PID Runtime(ms)   Invoked      uSecs   5Sec   1Min   5Min TTY Process
    123  1380698152 938782622       1470  6.07%  6.66%  6.52%   0 IP Input        
       9    71590456 190912340        374  0.39%  0.48%  0.47%   0 ARP Input       
    213    53552228 246488976        217  0.23%  0.42%  0.48%   0 SNMP ENGINE     
    176     2804332  35409778         79  0.15%  0.02%  0.00%   0 OSPF Hello      
    319      918144  11719407         78  0.15%  0.01%  0.00%   0 OSPF Router 100 
       4         236       195       1210  0.07%  0.00%  0.00%   1 Virtual Exec    
    169     2374788   2035919       1166  0.07%  0.03%  0.00%   0 Adj Manager     
    118     5885520  15709517        374  0.07%  0.07%  0.07%   0 CDP Protocol    
      36       69788   9934569          7  0.07%  0.00%  0.00%   0 TTY Background  
    179    30669516 309965501         98  0.07%  0.23%  0.24%   0 IP SNMP
    need a quick opinion as i have another backbone abroad that uses only 5-10% of cpu usage.
    - same config
    - same setup (2BB for Sec/firewall, 2BB for Integration, 6Distro SW)
    - different number of users
    thank you and god bless.

    I also agree with Stephan that this is not a concern that the cpu you are seeing it sohuld reduce down.
    If in case still want to do the troubleshooting here is the procedure:
    Here are some of the commands you can refer while you see the high cpu:
    •1-  Show proc cpu sorted | ex 0.00%  >> First check whether CPU is due to Interrupt or due to Process Switching.
    Eg: CPU utilization for five seconds: 6%/2%; one minute: 2%; five minutes: 2%
    6% is total CPU utilization and 2 % is due to Interrupt. You would see this on a higher bit when you have the high cpu. Total-interrupt will give you the value of Process.
    More info: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/switches/ps708/products_tech_note09186a00804916e0.shtml
    b) Show proc cpu history :---Check since how long is the CPU been affected.
    2- Check if there is any interface drops are been seen:
    show interface | include line|drops   ( Check if any vlan/interface are having input drops)
    3- check if there are any STP issue:
    show spanning tree detail
    show spann det | in ieee|from|occur|is exec
    show spann det | in executing | changes
    show interface | include line|drops
    show cef drop
    show ip traffic   >> Check the traffic utilization.
    4- There are some internal debugging which would help to find out which packets ( from Src,dst) is hitting the CPU:
    debug netdr capture rx  <<<<( DEBUG OF NETDR IS VERY USEFULL TO CHECK WHAT PACKETSS ARE COMING TO CPU)
    show netdr capture-packet  >> This will give you the captured outputs were you can see the Src and dst . Then you can take the action with those src ip address guys to check why they are punting the traffic.
    HTH
    Regards
    Inayath
    ***Plz rate if this info is helpfull.

  • High CPU usage on 2811 router

    dear support
    i have a problem recently, i have a 2811 router, there are several EIGRP VPN tunnel setup on it, recently i found this router running high CPU utilization, it almost reach 80 percent at the most day busy time, when i try to find what process causing that after " show proc cpu", the summarize number not such high, it estimate not more than 20 percent. i know in old Cisco IOS there is a command "show platform health", but seem this not exist in 2800 serials any more.
    so my question is what can i do next step to finding out what is causing high CPU usage, so that i can decide if the router need to be upgraded.
    thanks very much

    dear support
    i have a problem recently, i have a 2811 router, there are several EIGRP VPN tunnel setup on it, recently i found this router running high CPU utilization, it almost reach 80 percent at the most day busy time, when i try to find what process causing that after " show proc cpu", the summarize number not such high, it estimate not more than 20 percent. i know in old Cisco IOS there is a command "show platform health", but seem this not exist in 2800 serials any more.
    so my question is what can i do next step to finding out what is causing high CPU usage, so that i can decide if the router need to be upgraded.
    thanks very much

  • CSA 4.5.1(657) high cpu usage on windows 2003 sp1

    Hi,
    We have experiancing high cpu usage on windows 2003 sp1, when somebody logs in remotely. The server has 1gb of ram and the cpu is 2ghz. The Cisco Trust Agent (1.0.55) is installed also.
    When somebody logs in remotely the process okclient goes to 100% cpu and eats all the available RAM and the machine starts to swap, the pagefile has grown to 1gb. This is not all the time though, only in some cases like this one.
    Could this be due to some specigic policies associated with this machine be the cause of such behaviour?

    Hi Rossen,
    It could be due to some @remote rule but first some questions:
    What is the server function?
    What groups is it in?
    Does it have 2 enabled NICS?
    Is it sharing anything other than admin shares?
    Is it a member of AD\Domain or standalone?
    Why is the CTA installed?
    Why is your page file dynamic and not static and why is it only 1GB (should be 1.5x physical RAM)? Growing a page file is a slow and painful process.
    You can try some things right away:
    Either remove if from the groups that have @remote rules or put the server in a group with no rules\policies at all. That will tell you if it's the agent or the rules causing the problem.
    Good luck!
    Tom

Maybe you are looking for

  • Final Cut Studio 2 (Academic Version)

    I am a teacher and we have ordered and received 4 Final Cut Studio 2 packages. It came to us as the academic version. I know you cannot get upgrade to future Final Cut Studio packages, but is that the only difference? Does it have all of the other fe

  • Job Pricing and Job code & Level

    Hello Experts, As per the SAP link below: http://help.sap.com/saphelp_erp2004/helpdata/en/26/43dd7a51198c45b3181f5b3a067fa7/frameset.htm it says that .... Restrictions The following key fields must be matched in order to utilize the survey data: Job

  • AA - Error when I execute AS93 transaction

    Hi friends, When I run AS93 transaction I recieve the below error: "Data for asset view 0 is missing" Message no. AISBAUFBAU000 Diagnostic: Depreciation area 30 exists in company code US43. However, authorizations are not maintained for asset view 0

  • I get a black screen when taping my CAMERA icon.

    App stays on holding. How can I delete it?

  • Additional files (downloading)

    Hello, I just installed (Photoshop) and Premiere Elements 10 (from the DVD2+4). A friend of mine told me he downloaded an additional package from Internet, but he can't remember what it is used to or where to find it. Is there something I can downloa